The FMS Inspection Score is FindMySchool's proprietary analysis based on official Ofsted and ISI inspection reports. It converts ratings into a standardised 1–10 scale for fair comparison across all schools in England.
Disclaimer: The FMS Inspection Score is an independent analysis by FindMySchool. It is not endorsed by or affiliated with Ofsted or ISI. Always refer to the official Ofsted or ISI report for the full picture of a school’s inspection outcome.
“SOAR” is more than a slogan here. Support, Opportunity, Achievement and Respect shows up in the way pupils behave, how lessons are structured, and how leadership talks about ambition for every child. The latest Ofsted inspection (published 16 January 2025, following visits on 3 and 4 December 2024) graded every key area as Outstanding, including early years provision.
Academic outcomes back up the reputation. In 2024, 90% of Year 6 pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, well above the England average of 62%. At the higher standard, 46% met the threshold, compared with 8% across England. The school’s scaled scores were 109 in reading, maths, and grammar, punctuation and spelling.
It is also competitive at the main entry point. Reception admissions data shows 134 applications for 51 offers, meaning demand materially exceeds supply. For families who secure a place, the combination of high attainment, calm routines, and a clear Church of England identity will feel reassuring and purposeful.
This is a Church of England primary where faith is visible without feeling narrow. The wider ethos emphasises belonging, respect, and responsibility, and the school describes itself as part of God’s loving family while aiming to develop resilient, curious learners.
The leadership picture is stable. The headteacher is Mrs Katie Savage, and trust documentation records her start date as 01 September 2020. The school sits within Bradford Diocesan Academies Trust (BDAT), which matters day to day because professional development and shared practice run across the trust.
Community links are a clear strand. The Ofsted report highlights pupils’ involvement with local projects, including church-linked work such as designing Christmas ornaments, alongside wider community initiatives like recycling competitions and pupil councils (including a dedicated SOAR council). A BDAT story also describes the school opening a new worship garden and marking a trust-wide time capsule project, which gives a practical sense of how the school ties together faith, community, and pupil voice.
With nursery provision from age three, early years is not an add-on. The early years curriculum is described as ambitious and carefully sequenced from nursery into Reception, with structured work around language, early maths, and early reading. For parents, the implication is simple: children who start in nursery are stepping into the same routines and expectations that shape outcomes later in Key Stage 2.
Important note for families researching costs: nursery fees change and should be checked directly with the school.
Results are presented here as a Key Stage 2 picture, since this is a primary school.
In 2024, 90% of pupils met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined. The England average in the same measure is 62%, so this is materially above typical performance. At the higher standard, 46% achieved greater depth across the combined measure, compared with 8% across England.
Scaled scores also indicate strength: reading 109, maths 109, and grammar, punctuation and spelling 109. The combined total score across reading, maths, and GPS is 327. These figures suggest consistent attainment across the core tested areas, rather than a single spike in one subject.
Ranked 925th in England and 1st in Shipley for primary outcomes, this places the school well above the England average, within the top 10% of primary schools in England (FindMySchool ranking based on official performance data).
If you are comparing local options, the FindMySchool Local Hub comparison tools can help you view these results side by side with nearby schools, using the same methodology.
England ranks and key metrics (where available)
Reading, Writing & Maths
90%
% of pupils achieving expected standard
The most useful way to understand teaching here is through structure and sequencing.
Across the main curriculum, the school places emphasis on well-sequenced lessons with deliberate retrieval and checking for understanding. The Ofsted inspection describes consistent routines such as follow-ups, recap, and pre and post knowledge checks, which helps explain why outcomes look steady rather than volatile.
Reading is an obvious pillar. Phonics starts early, with daily work on blending and decoding and reading books matched to pupils’ stage. Where pupils need additional support, intervention and one-to-one reading are built into the model, rather than being left to chance. The practical implication for parents is that weaker starting points are less likely to drift, because support is designed as part of the system.
Curriculum breadth is also visible in the detail the school publishes in subject areas, including design and technology, computing, and SMSC (spiritual, moral, social and cultural education). For families who value a balanced primary experience, this matters because strong test results sometimes come with a narrower offer elsewhere. Here, the published curriculum coverage and inspection evidence point to challenge and ambition across subjects.
As a Bradford primary, Year 6 transition is the key step. The school references structured preparation for moving on, and school documents note that preparations for transfer to secondary school begin earlier for pupils with an Education, Health and Care Plan, often starting in Year 5.
Without publishing a single list of destination secondary schools, the safest evidence-based takeaway is this: the curriculum is deliberately aligned to what comes next, and transition for more vulnerable pupils is planned early and explicitly. If your shortlist includes particular secondaries, it is sensible to ask how Year 6 transition is handled for those specific destinations, including induction days, pastoral handover, and support for pupils with additional needs.
Entry is primarily through nursery and Reception, with Reception being the main pressure point.
Reception admissions data shows 134 applications for 51 offers, alongside an “Oversubscribed” status. That pattern typically means families should treat admission as competitive, even if you live nearby.
Bradford’s co-ordinated admissions deadline for primary applications is 15 January 2026 for September 2026 entry, with late applications generally treated differently unless exceptional circumstances apply.
For this school specifically, Bradford’s published admissions arrangements for 2026 to 2027 include a supplementary faith-based form route, with the form return deadline stated as midnight on 15 January.
Parents considering a place should read the oversubscription criteria carefully, particularly where church attendance evidence is required. The school’s admissions information also highlights that appeals are handled through Bradford for Reception intake, typically in June or July ahead of a September start.
If you are deciding between two addresses or weighing a move, FindMySchoolMap Search is a practical way to sanity-check distance assumptions, especially when a school is oversubscribed.
100%
1st preference success rate
50 of 50 first-choice applicants received an offer
Places
51
Offers
51
Applications
134
Pastoral care is closely tied to culture here: mutual respect, trust in adults, and a clear expectation of positive behaviour sit at the centre of the school’s self-image and inspection evidence.
The Ofsted report states that safeguarding arrangements are effective. Beyond that headline, the school publishes safeguarding and online safety information, and also outlines how transition support is planned for pupils with additional needs.
If your child is anxious, has SEND, or has previously struggled with attendance, your best next step is to ask about early identification and the practical support offer, including how interventions are delivered and how communication with families works. The inspection evidence points to a system designed to spot needs quickly and respond in a structured way.
The most convincing enrichment evidence is specific.
The Ofsted report describes a wide range of enrichment, including music opportunities, sport, drama and creative arts, plus educational visits and residentials that pupils see as highlights. It also notes leadership roles through councils, including school council and SOAR council.
Wraparound provision is a practical part of the offer. The school publishes information about Breakfast Care Club operating from 7.30am to 8.50am in term time for Reception to Year 6. There is also an on-site childcare club called Funtastik, described as inclusive and supervised by trained staff.
For families juggling commuting, that mix of enrichment, leadership opportunities, and wraparound care can reduce the sense that “school life” ends at 3.15pm. It also tends to strengthen relationships between year groups, because clubs and care settings mix pupils in ways the classroom day does not.
The school day for Reception to Year 6 is published as 8.45am to 3.15pm, equivalent to 32.5 hours per week. Breakfast Care Club hours are published as 7.30am to 8.50am in term time.
For transport, the school publishes a dedicated school bus page describing a “Yellow Bus” service for morning pickup and end-of-day drop-off. Baildon also has a rail station with links on the Wharfedale line, including services to Ilkley and Bradford Forster Square, and connections via Shipley for Leeds.
Admission pressure. With 134 applications for 51 Reception offers, demand is high. Families should read the oversubscription criteria early, including any church attendance evidence routes.
Faith expectations. This is a Church of England school with a clear Christian identity and church links. Many families value that, but those wanting a fully secular experience should weigh fit carefully.
Nursery details require checking. Nursery provision is part of the school, but fee details are not something to assume. Parents should verify sessions, availability, and costs directly with the school.
Results can raise the pace. With outcomes well above England averages, expectations are likely to feel ambitious. For some children this is energising; for others it can feel pressurised unless balanced with reassurance and support.
A high-performing, values-led Church of England primary with an Outstanding inspection profile across all key judgements and a clear thread from early years through to Year 6 outcomes. It suits families who want strong academic challenge alongside structured routines, visible faith identity, and a community-centred approach. The main challenge is securing a place at the primary entry point.
The evidence points to a very strong school. Key Stage 2 outcomes in 2024 were well above England averages, and the most recent inspection graded every key judgement as Outstanding, including early years provision.
The school sits within Bradford’s admissions system and is listed within a Bradford “priority area” framework for primary admissions. Families should rely on the published admissions arrangements and priority area information rather than informal catchment assumptions.
Applications are made through Bradford’s co-ordinated admissions process, with a deadline of 15 January 2026 for September 2026 entry. The school’s admissions arrangements for 2026 to 2027 also include a supplementary form route for faith criteria, with the deadline stated as midnight on 15 January.
Yes. The school publishes a Breakfast Care Club (7.30am to 8.50am in term time for Reception to Year 6) and an on-site childcare club called Funtastik. Parents should check the latest availability and booking arrangements directly with the provider.
In 2024, 90% met the expected standard in reading, writing and maths combined, compared with 62% across England. At the higher standard, 46% achieved the combined threshold, compared with 8% across England. Scaled scores were 109 in reading, maths, and grammar, punctuation and spelling.
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